 So, our next patient is a 33-year-old lactating woman with a palpable lump in the left breast. So, for this patient who is 33-but lactating, we started with ultrasound in the area of palpable concern. So, that was in the left breast, just a little bit lateral to the nipple. And we saw this hypoechoic, irregular mass, sort of taller than wide, measuring about two centimeters in greatest dimension. Here it is an anti-radial and radial plane. A little blood flow around the edges, not internally. And we were pretty worried about this. So, we knew we were going to recommend a biopsy for it, but just to complete her workup, we recommended a bilateral mammogram. So, that was done on the same day. So, we did CC and MLO views of both breasts, and we can see that in the left breast, slightly lateral to the nipple and posterior depth, there's this asymmetry. And we also see it on the MLO view. We're not really seeing anything obvious in the other breast, but just to have a closer look at this. We looked with tomosynthesis. So, this is our mass that we've just looked at with ultrasound. You know, nothing else in this breast. We looked on our MLO. This is our MLO tomosynthesis view. We actually saw that there was one other mass that we were interested in, and we went back to ultrasound and found a cyst in that location. So, that was okay. We looked at the other side. CC view. Nothing there. And then MLO view looked good as well. Okay. So, you know, we've done an ultrasound and a mammogram. We are finding one mass that we're concerned about, and that was recommended for ultrasound guided biopsy. And then the biopsy result was invasive ductal carcinoma poorly differentiated.